Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 July 2009
When Brigadier General Thomas Farrell groped to describe (in an official government report) the subjective effect of the first atomic explosion at Alamogordo, New Mexico, at 5:29:50 A.M. on July 16, 1945, he found himself, like many a would-be writer of the sublime before him, at a loss for adequate terms and tropes – stupefied, dwarfed, reaching for hyperbolic endterms like “doomsday” and “blasphemous” and resorting to spaced-out adjectives such as “tremendous” or “awesome” that 19thcentury Americans had reserved for more manageable spectacles of God's grandeur such as Niagara Falls or the Grand Canyon. Though a military man and no poet, as Farrell registered this history-shattering event in words, he struggled to command some rhetoric of ultimacy before nuclear “effects [that] could well be called unprecedented, magnificent, beautiful, stupendous and terrifying”:
No man-made phenomenon of such tremendous power had ever occurred before. The lighting effects beggared description. The whole country was lighted by a searing light with the intensity many times that of the midday sun. It was golden, purple, violet, gray and blue. It lighted every peak, crevasse, and mountain range with a clarity and beauty that cannot be described but must be seen to be imagined. It was the beauty the great poets dream about but describe most poorly and inadequately. Thirty seconds after the explosion came, first the air blast pressing hard against people and things, to be followed almost immediately by the strong, sustained awesome roar which warned of doomsday and made us feel that we puny things were blasphemous to dare tamper with the forces heretofore reserved to The Almighty. Words are inadequate tools for the job of acquainting those not present with the physical, mental, and psychological effects. It had to be witnessed to be realized.
1. See Barash, David, “Immediate Effects of Nuclear Explosions,” The Arms Race and Nuclear War (Belmont, Cal.: Wadsworth, 1987), p. 64Google Scholar. Farrell's report is part of General Leslie R. Grove's initial “Report on Alamogordo Atomic Bomb Test, Memorandum for the Secretary of War” [Top Secret]: this document is reprinted as an appendix to Sherwin, Martin J., A World Destroyed: The Atomic Bomb and the Grand Alliance (New York: Knopf, 1975), pp. 310–12Google Scholar. I would like to thank Brien Hallett of the University of Hawaii's Peace Institute for wellinformed guidance on this crucial subject. General Farrell's firsthand evocation of “the nuclear sublime” intuits what I call the post-nuclear historical rupture of atomic forces in these terms: “All seemed to feel that they had been present at the birth of a new age – the Age of Atomic Energy – and felt their profound responsibility to help in guiding into right channels the tremendous forces which had been unlocked for the first time in history [at the Alamogordo bomb test]” (p. 312). America as a “Post Bomb” place is shrewdly described by Flannery O'Connor in a letter to Betty Boyd postmarked November 5, 1949: “Congratulations on Los Alamos. Was Los Alamos a place before the bomb? My notions of the southwest are very vague but I should think you would have definite sensations about living in a place completely Post Bomb.” See The Habit of Being, ed. Fitzgerald, Sally (New York: Farrar, 1979), p. 18.Google Scholar
2. Bakhtin, M. M., Speech Genres & Other Late Essays. trans. McGee, Vern W. (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1986), p. 4.Google Scholar
3. I comment more fully on General Farrell's compound of ideological uncertainty and American piety before the bomb in “Postmodern as Post-Nuclear: Landscape as Nuclear Grid,” in Ethics/Aesthetics: Post-Modern Positions, ed. Merrill, Robert (Washington: Maisonneuve Press, 1988), pp. 169–92Google Scholar. The atomic landscape of postmodernism's “alter [post-altar] sublime,” for example, is bravely articulated in the work of Canadian “Language Poet,” Dewdney, Christopher, Alter Sublime (Toronto: Coach House Press, 1980), pp. 11–22Google Scholar: “The room breaking into flashing white shards of interstellar nothingness” (p. 18). Landscape implodes into technoscape, self into vasty cybernetics.
4. See Adorno, Theodor, Aesthetic Theory, trans. Lenhardt, C. (1970; rept. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1984), pp. 280–84Google Scholar: “The sublime in nature and art [and play].”
5. In Schley, Jim, ed., Writing in a Nuclear Age (Hanover, N.H.: University Press of New England, 1984), p. 223Google Scholar; on the deconstructive paradoxes pervading the rhetorical overkill of nuclear force, see Solomon, J. Fisher, Discourse and Reference in the Nuclear Age (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1988).Google Scholar
6. Perelman, Bob, “Statement,” in To the Reader (Berkeley: Tuumba Press, 1984), n.p.Google Scholar
7. Cooper's essay appears in Jones, Richard, ed., Poetry and Politics: An Anthology of Essays (New York: Morrow, 1985), p. 306Google Scholar; I draw some nuclear data from Ground Zero (Director, Molander, Roger), eds., Nuclear War: What's in It for You? (New York: Pocket Books, 1982), p. 34Google Scholar; and Heaney's comment appears in Schley, , Writing in a Nuclear Age, p. 150.Google Scholar
8. Lowell, Robert, “Fall 1961,” in For the Union Dead (New York: Noonday, 1964), p. 11.Google Scholar
9. Auden's poem is reprinted in Schley, , Writing in a Nuclear Age, pp. 1–2.Google Scholar
10. See Thompson, E. P., “Deterrence and Addiction,” Yale Review 72 (1982): 1–18.Google Scholar
11. This is the claim of Ground Zero, Nuclear War: What's in It for You? p. 60.Google Scholar
12. Oppen, George, The Collected Poems (New York: New Directions, 1975), p. 49.Google Scholar
13. See Sklar, Morty, ed., Nuke-Rebuke: Writers & Artists Against Nuclear Energy & Weapons (Iowa City, Ia.: The Spirit That Moves Us Press, 1984), p. 103.Google Scholar
14. Derrida, Jacques, “No Apocalypse, Not Now (full speed ahead, seven missiles, seven missives),” Diacritics 14 (1984): 20–31, pp. 21, 27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
15. Frost, Robert, “Fire and Ice,” The Poetry of Robert Frost (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1969), p. 220Google Scholar. This ice-and-fire “destruction” was evoked – on a cosmic scale – in World War I.
16. Perelman, , To The Reader (see note 6 above).Google Scholar
17. Perelman, Bob, The First World (Great Barrington, Mass.: The Figures, 1986), p. 23.Google Scholar
18. Reprinted in Schley, , Writing in a Nuclear Age, p. 11.Google Scholar
19. Ferguson, Frances, “The Nuclear Sublime,” Diacritics 14 (1984): 4–10CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and “The Sublime of Edmund Burke, Or the Bathos of Experience,” Glyph 8 (1981): 62–78.Google Scholar
20. See Jameson, Fredric on “Periodizing the 60's” Social Text 3 (1984): 178–209; see p. 200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
21. Schopenhauer, Arthur, The World as Will and Representation, trans. Payne, E. F. J. (New York: Dover, 1969), p. 205Google Scholar. (Subsequent references to this compelling analysis of the will-to-sublimity appear in parentheses.) On the ideological functioning of aesthetic “double consciousness” within 19th-century materiality, see Wilson, Rob, “Sculling to the Over-Soul: Louis Simpson, American Transcendentalism, and Thomas Eakins's Max Schmitt in a Single Scull,” American Quarterly 39 (1987): 410–29CrossRefGoogle Scholar. The poetic sublime leaves nature intact, yet wills domination.
22. Stevens, Wallace, Collected Poems (1954; rept. New York: Knopf, 1974), p. 314.Google Scholar
23. Ibid., pp. 201–3.
24. Mariani, Paul, William Carlos Williams: A New World Naked (New York: McGraw Hill, 1981), p. 738.Google Scholar
25. Ibid., p. 699.
26. See Klein, Richard and Warner, William B., “Nuclear Coincidence and the Korean Airline Disaster,” Diacritics 16 (1986): 2–21Google Scholar. From another, more post-Jungian point of view on imaging-forth the nuclear sublime as a (symbolic) way of preventing its literal occurrence in history, see the boundary-crossing essays collected in Andrews, Valerie, Bosnak, Robert, and Goodwin, Karen Walter, eds., Facing Apocalypse (Dallas: Spring Publications, 1987).Google Scholar
27. Derrida, , “No Apocalypse, Not Now,” p. 23Google Scholar. On the related, yet quite differently inflected idea that “There will never be a [nuclear] catastrophe, because we live under the sign of virtual catastrophe [nuclear simulacra],” see Baudrillard, Jean, “Panic Crash!”Google Scholar in Kroker, Arthur, Kroker, Marilouise, and Cook, David, Panic Encyclopedia: The Definitive Guide to the Postmodern Scene (New York: St. Martin's, 1989), p. 64CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Also see the attempt to think our post-nuclear de-realization into one “hyperreal” technoscape and simulacrous mediascape in Baudrillard, Jean, “Orbital and Nuclear,” in Simulations, trans. Foss, Paul, Patton, Paul, and Beitchman, Philip (New York: Semiotext [e], 1983), pp. 58–75.Google Scholar
28. See Benjamin, Walter's disturbing, dread-and-wonder evocation of the new technologies of war, Reflections: Essays, Aphorisms, Autobiographical Writings, trans. Jephcott, Edmund (New York: Schocken, 1986), p. 94.Google Scholar
29. Adorno, , Aesthetic Theory, p. 284.Google Scholar
30. This is the kind of big question — concerning vast forces and negations (American “terror, terror beheld and resisted”) — which cultural critics such as Terrence Des Pres in anthologies like Writing in a Nuclear Age (p. 11) are urging American poets to contend with as consequences of their own globe-policing culture. Also see the inadequately theorized portrayal of lyric self against a deaththreatening system in Praises & Dispraises: Poetry and Politics, the 20th Century (New York: Viking, 1988).Google Scholar
31. See Ferguson, on Kant, , “The Nuclear Sublime,” p. 6.Google Scholar
32. Denise Levertov appears in Jones, Richard's anthology, Poetry and Politics, p. 312Google Scholar; Forché, Carolyn, “Imagine the Worst,” Mother Jones (10 1984): 39.Google Scholar
33. Talk on anti-nuclear poetics in Perelman, Bob, ed., Writing/Talks (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1985), p. 88.Google Scholar
34. Scheer, Robert, With Enough Shovels: Reagan, Bush and Nuclear War (New York: Random, 1982), p. 121.Google Scholar
35. Derrida, , “No Apocalypse, Not Now,” p. 23.Google Scholar
36. Dorn, Edward, Hello, La Jolla (Berkeley: Wingbow Press, 1978), p. 25.Google Scholar
37. Creeley's poem appears in Sklar, , Nuke-Rebuke, p. 104.Google Scholar
38. This small-town rapturism is depicted in Mottjabai, A. G., Blessed Assurance: At Home with the Bomb in Amarillo, Texas (Boston: Hougton, 1986).Google Scholar
39. Poem in Perelman, , To the Reader (1984).Google Scholar
40. See Boyer, Paul, By the Bomb's Early Light: American Thought and Culture at the Dawn of the Atomic Age (New York: Pantheon, 1985)Google Scholar; Schell, Jonathan, The Fate of the Earth (New York: Knopf, 1982)Google Scholar; and Rogin, Michael, “Kiss Me Deadly: Communism, Motherhood and Cold War Movies,” Representations 6 (1984): 1–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
41. Scheer, , With Enough Shovels, pp. 18–32Google Scholar; Ashbery, John, The Double Dream of Spring (New York: Dutton, 1970), p. 13.Google Scholar
42. Boyer, , By the Bomb's Early Light, pp. 243–56.Google Scholar
43. Williams, William Carlos, Pictures from Brueghel and Other Poems, in Collected Poems, 1950–1962 (New York: New Directions, 1962), p. 165.Google Scholar
44. On the “liminal” tactics of textual deconstruction, see the post-Derridean speculations of Hartman, Geoffrey H., Saving the Text: Literature/Derrida/Philosophy (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1981), p. 150.Google Scholar
45. Perelman, , “Person,” The First World, p. 51.Google Scholar
46. As quoted in Zero, Ground, Nuclear War: What's in It for You? p. 29.Google Scholar
47. Ai, , “The Testimony of J. Robert Oppenheimer,” Sin (Boston: Houghton, 1986), pp. 64–67Google Scholar; also see Wilson, Rob, “The Will to Transcendence in Contemporary American Poet, Ai,” Canadian Review of American Studies 17 (1986): 437–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
48. In Contact II, eds., Nuke Chronicles: Art on the End (New York: Contact II Publications, 1985), p. 10.Google Scholar
49. Ginsberg, Allen, Plutonian Ode and Other Poems, 1977–1980 (San Francisco: City Lights, 1982), pp. 12–13.Google Scholar
50. In Bruchac, Joseph; ed., Breaking Silence: An Anthology of Contemporary Asian American Poets (Greenfield, N.Y.: Greenfield Review Press, 1983), p. 272.Google Scholar
51. Salter, Mary Jo, Henry Purcell in Japan (New York: Knopf, 1985), p. 59.Google Scholar
52. Hass, Robert, “Images,” in Twentieth Century Pleasures: Prose on Poetry (New York: Ecco, 1984), p. 303.Google Scholar
53. Stafford, William, note to “Next Time,”Google Scholar in Schley, , Writing in a Nuclear Age, p. 202.Google Scholar
54. Kaminsky, Marc, The Road From Hiroshima (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1984), pp. 41–43.Google Scholar
55. Duras, Marguerite, Hiroshma Mon Amour (text for the film by Alain Resnais), trans. Seaver, Richard (New York: Grove Press, 1961)Google Scholar; on Duras, 's postmodernism as “post-nuclear”Google Scholar in form and affect, see Kristeva, Julia, “The Pain of Sorrow in the Modern World,” PMLA 102 (1987): 138–152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
56. Stein, Gertrude, Reflection on the Atom Bomb, in Uncollected Writings of Gertrude Stein, vol. 1, ed., Haas, Robert Bartlett (Los Angeles: Black Sparrow Press, 1973 [1946]).Google Scholar
57. Mailer, Norman, Of a Fire on the Moon (New York: Signet, 1970), p. 60.Google Scholar
58. Lowell, , For the Union Dead, p. 72.Google Scholar
59. See Jameson, Fredric, “Baudelaire as Modernist and Postmodernist: The Dissolution of the Referent and the Artifical ‘Sublime,’” Lyric Poetry: Beyond New Criticism, ed., Hosek, Chaviva and Parker, Patricia (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985), p. 262.Google Scholar
60. See Deleuze, Gilles and Guattari, Felix, Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia, trans. Hurley, Robert, Seem, Mark, and Lane, Helen R. (1972; rept. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1983)Google Scholar on “desiring-production” mechanisms of the Oedipalized ego.
61. Cage, John, A Year From Monday: New Lectures and Writings (Middletown, Conn: Wesleyan University Press, 1967), p. 159.Google Scholar
62. Stevens, , Collected Poems, p. 95.Google Scholar
63. Benjamin, , Reflections, p. 93.Google Scholar
64. Marx, Leo, “On Heidegger's Conception of ‘Technology’ and Its Historical Validity,” Massachusetts Review 25 (1984): 638–52, p. 645.Google Scholar For an even less enchanted view of America's “technological activism” and control of North American self-representations, see Kroker, Arthur, Technology and the Canadian Mind: Innis/McLuhan/Grant (Montreal: New World Perspectives, 1984)Google Scholar; and Guillory, Daniel L., “Leaving the Atocha Station: Contemporary Poetry and Technology,” TriQuarterly 52 (1981): 165–81.Google Scholar
65. I am implicitly building upon (and amplifying) reflections on the “rhetoric of the technological sublime” in Marx, Leo's The Machine in the Garden: Technology and the Pastoral Ideal in America (New York: Oxford University Press, 1964)Google Scholar; and the mythopoesis of technology in Trachtenberg, Alan, Brooklyn Bridge: Fact and Symbol (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1965)Google Scholar: “Translating engineering accomplishments into ideas, the poet [Whitman/Crane] completed the work of [American] history, and prepared for the ultimate journey to ‘more than India,’ the journey to the Soul: ‘thou actual Me’” (p. 150). Euphoria at the urban technoscape, as in Crane, is, however, double-coded with sheer dread: an emerging panic sublime that threatens the power claims of lyric selfhood.
66. Pinsky, Robert, “The Uncreation.” The New Republic (04 14, 1986): 38.Google Scholar
67. Pinsky, Robert, History of My Heart (New York: Ecco, 1984), pp. 3–4.Google Scholar
68. See Geuss, Raymond, The Idea of a Critical Theory: Habermas & the Frankfurt School (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1981)Google Scholar; and, in the American grain of “prophetic pragmatism” as cultural critique, see West, Cornel, The American Evasion of Philosophy: A Genealogy of Pragmatism (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1989).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
69. Heidegger, Martin, The Question Concerning Technology and Other Essays, trans. Lovitt, William (New York: Harper, 1977), p. 49Google Scholar; also see the counterresponse of Poetry, Language, Thought, trans. Hofstadter, Albert (New York: Harper, 1971).Google Scholar
70. Heidegger, , The Question Concerning Technology, pp. 14, 26–27.Google Scholar
71. Marx, , “On Heidegger's Conception of Technology,” p. 649.Google Scholar
72. Heidegger, , The Question Concerning Technology, pp. 13–17.Google Scholar
73. Crane, Hart, Complete Poems and Selected Letters and Prose (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1966), p. 116.Google Scholar
74. Stevens, Wallace, “Of Mere Being” (1955)Google Scholar: for obvious reasons having to do with the whole genre of the American sublime, I prefer the phrase “bronze distance” (suggesting natural vastness) in the third line (used in Opus Posthumous, 1957)Google Scholar to its textual variant, “bronze decor” (suggesting an aura of aesthetic bric-a-brac, or even Jameson, 's “camp sublime”), as used by Stevens, Holly, ed., The Palm at the End of the Mind (New York: Vintage, 1972), pp. 398, 404.Google Scholar On Stevens's lifelong struggle with the Romantic sacralizing and/or modernist de-idealizing of sublime landscapes, as in “The Rock,” see Wilson, Rob, “Wallace Stevens: Decreating the American Sublime,” American Poetry 3 (1986): 13–33.Google Scholar